Ludvig Åberg first to use new rule for replacing damaged driver

Ludvig Åberg and his caddie Joe Skovron made history by being the first to utilize a 2026 PGA Tour rules update allowing on-the-spot replacement of a damaged club. This occurred during the third round at Pebble Beach on the 18th tee. The change addressed previous limitations that required spares to be kept in the locker room.

Ludvig Åberg hit his drive out of bounds on the par-5 18th hole—his ninth hole of the round—during the third round at Pebble Beach. He then noticed a crack in the face of his driver.

The incident highlighted a recent update to Model Local Rule G-9, which was modified at the start of 2025 to permit replacement for a visible crack in the club face. Previously, as seen when Matt Fitzpatrick was denied a replacement during the BMW Championship at Castle Pines the year before, spares had to remain in the locker room.

In 2026, the PGA Tour advocated for further changes, enabling players to carry a spare driver head in their bag for immediate replacement if damage is confirmed. Åberg's caddie, Joe Skovron, had the backup in the bag.

“They sent out rules changes at the start of the year and one of them was you no longer had to keep it (the replacement) in the locker,” Skovron said. “Before, someone had to get it for you. Now you can carry it in the bag, and if your driver is deemed damaged, you could put that one in. I had the backup in the belly of the bag.”

Skovron noted that the rule benefits power players with high clubhead speeds and thinner club faces. Åberg called for a rules official, who approved the crack, allowing Skovron to attach the replacement on the spot. Without it, Åberg would have used his 3-wood for the next shot and waited until the turn near the clubhouse to replace the driver.

Åberg reached the green in two shots and narrowly missed an 18-foot putt for par.

PGA Tour rules official Steve Rintoul described the situation as a “perfect example why we pushed hard for the local rule to change.” He added, “A guy discovers a crack on the 10th tee, his caddie can go to the locker room. If it’s on the 14th tee, it might be two holes before he gets it. We like the fact if a club is cracked or broken, it can be replaced right there. The old method of the replacement was so archaic.”

संबंधित लेख

Cameron Young lifts Players Championship trophy on TPC Sawgrass 18th green after dramatic win.
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Cameron Young wins Players Championship after Ludvig Åberg's final-round collapse

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Cameron Young captured his second PGA Tour title at the Players Championship, closing with a 4-under 68 at TPC Sawgrass to finish at 13-under par—one stroke ahead of Matt Fitzpatrick. 54-hole leader Ludvig Åberg faltered badly with a 4-over 76, dropping into a tie for fifth at 9 under amid back-nine woes.

Ludvig Åberg started the RBC Heritage on Hilton Head Island with a bogey-free 63, eight under par, leading solo. His drive on the ninth hole struck a woman in the crowd, but he apologized with a signed glove. A week after the Masters, the Swede is back in top form.

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Swedish golfer Ludvig Åberg ended his first round in the PGA Championship with three bogeys in five holes and carded 72 strokes, two over par.

Haotong Li endured a dramatic collapse on the 13th hole during the final round of the Masters in Augusta, Georgia, carding a quintuple-bogey 10 that derailed his tournament. Playing partner Scottie Scheffler waited patiently as Li's ball ricocheted into bushes across Rae’s Creek, leading to multiple mishaps including improper drops and putts into the water. The incident, witnessed by patrons but not aired on television, highlighted the perils of Augusta National.

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J.J. Spaun captured his third PGA Tour victory—and second at the Valero Texas Open—finishing at 17-under par at TPC San Antonio. He sealed the win on the par-4 17th with an eagle from a clutch Titleist GT3 driver tee shot that rolled out to 10 feet, then parred the tough 18th. Spaun navigated a marathon final day in windy, cold, and wet conditions, playing his last 27 holes in 9-under par to earn $1.764 million from the $9.8 million purse.

Ludvig Åberg shot 69 on Saturday's third round of the US Masters but expressed disappointment with the result. He made seven birdies but also four bogeys, leaving him tied for 20th at –3 after three rounds. Åberg criticized his mistakes on the front nine.

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Geoff Yang, an Augusta National member and veteran USGA rules official, has begun his first year as chairman of the competition committees at The Masters. He joined club chairman Fred Ridley at the annual State of the Masters press conference in Augusta, Georgia. In the role, Yang oversees rules enforcement and course setup.

 

 

 

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